My birthday falls on December 23 and when I read the following news report by AFP, I couldn't help but heaved a sigh of relief, .... heh heh heh. The world is coming to an end? Nah, not in another 1 million years and we would have been reincarnated a few thousand times to walk on this planet earth over and over again.
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Relax doomsayers, the Maya people did not really mark their calendar for the end
of the world on December 21, 2012.
As tourists book hotel rooms in Mexico's Maya Riviera and Guatemalan resorts
ahead of next month's fateful date, experts are busy debunking the doomsday
myth.
The apocalyptic prophecy that has inspired authors and filmmakers never
appears in the tall T-shaped stone calendar that was carved by the Maya around
the year 669 in southeastern Mexico.
In reality, the stone recounts the life and battles of a ruler from that era,
experts say. Plus, the last date on the calendar is actually December 23, 2012,
not the 21st, and it merely marks the end of a cycle.
So no need to build giant arks, because the terrible floods, earthquakes and
volcanic eruptions depicted in the Hollywood blockbuster "2012" were not
prophesied by the Mayas.
"The Mayas had a cyclical idea of time. They were not preoccupied with the
end of the world," Mexican archeologist Jose Romero told AFP.
The stone, known as Monument 6, was located in El Tortuguero, an
archeological site that was discovered in 1915.
Broken in six pieces, the different fragments are exhibited in US and Mexican
museums, including Tabasco's Carlos Pellicer Camara Anthropology Museum and New
York's Metropolitan Museum.
The first study on the stone was published by a German researcher in 1978.
Since then, various archeologists have examined its significance and agree that
it refers to the December 23 date.
"The last inscription refers to December 23, 2012, but the central theme of
Monument 6 is not the date, it's not the prophecies or the end of the world.
It's the story of (then-ruler) Bahlam Ajaw," Romero said.
The final date represents the end of a cycle in the Mayan long count calendar
that began in the year 3114 before Christ. It is the completion of 13 baak
t'uunes, a unit of time equivalent to 144,000 days.
"It is not the end of the Mayan long count calendar, which is endless. It's
the beginning of a new cycle, that's all," said Mexican historian Erick
Velasquez.
Though the Maya made prophecies, they looked at events in the near future and
were related to day-to-day concerns like rain, droughts, or harvests.
The belief that the calendar foresees the end of the world comes from
Judeo-Christian interpretations, the experts said.
Velasquez warned against giving too much weight to Monument 6, noting that it
is just one of more than 5,000 stones from the Mayan culture that have been
studied.
The Earth still has a few years left, even in eyes of the ancient Maya: Some
stones refer to the year 7000.
- AFP
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